As one of Microsoft's four Windows Phone 8 device manufacturers -- the other three being Nokia, Samsung, and HTC -- Huawei's forced absence was linked to the pressure from the U.S. government, at least to the company's vice president Yu Chengdong.

Microsoft had claimed that it made the decision out of different marketing strategies.

"We are one of the four [Windows Phone 8] makers and yet [we] could not attend the global launch," Yu wrote on his Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter. "I hope this inapprehensible situation brings no surprise in the midst of political and business struggles between China and the U.S."

The U.S. House Intelligence Committee recently released a report stating that Huawei's lack of operation transparency hindered its investigation, and its alleged links to the Chinese Liberation Army threatened the U.S. national security.

In a hope to boost the company's image, Huawei invited CBS News 60 Minutes to its headquarters in Shenzhen, China during the summer to interview Bill Plummer, the firm's U.S. spokesperson, while Huawei's mysterious chief executive Ren Zhengfei continued to fly under the radar and avoided all Western media coverage.

In face of serial setbacks, Huawei and counterpart ZTE, are developing their own operating systems to rival Android, iOS and Windows Phone platforms. According to Huawei's consumer products Wan Biao, the operation system research and development is underway; ZTE also plans to launch its own operating system in China during the fourth quarter, said vice executive president He Shiyou in a talk with a local website.